Photos: France President Grants The African Migrant Who Climbed 4 Storey To Save A Child, French Citizenship

A Malian migrant who rescued a four-year-old child hanging from a balcony has been made an honorary French citizen. Mamoudou Gassama, who had been living illegally in France, was dubbed a “real-life Spider-Man” after quickly scaling a building in Paris’ northern 18th district on Saturday. President Macron invited Mr Gassama to the Elysee Palace on Monday to thank him personally and honour him French citizenship. ‘Thank God, I saved the child’ Footage on social media shows the 22-year-old climb up the block of flats and has gone viral – with one post having been watched over seven million times. “I saw all these people shouting, and cars sounding their horns. I climbed up like that and, thank God, I saved the child,” Mr Gassama told reporters after the event.

A video of Mamoudou Gassama’s spectacular rescue went viral on social media and has been viewed millions of times.

With a crowd below cheering him on from the street, the migrant pulled himself from balcony to balcony at risk of life and limb, and managed to grab the four-year-old as a neighbour unsuccessfully tried to reach the boy from the nearest flat.

President Emmanuel Macron invited Mr Gassama to the Elysee Palace on Monday morning to personally thank him. During their filmed conversation, Mr Gassama said that he was trembling like a leaf after his courageous act.

Afterwards, Mr Macron announced that he would be granted French citizenship and join the French fire brigade.

Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo also lauded the 22-year-old’s heroism, and said she had called him to thank him in person.

She hailed him as the “Spiderman of the 18th”, a reference to the Paris district where the rescue took place.

“Congratulations to Mamoudou Gassama for his act of bravery that saved the life of a child,” Ms Hidalgo tweeted.

“He explained to me that he had arrived from Mali a few months ago dreaming of building his life here.

“I replied that his heroic gesture was an example for all citizens and that the City of Paris will obviously be keen to support him in his efforts to settle in France.”

Hinting that he could expect a fast track to residency, government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux tweeted: “This huge act of bravery, faithful to the values of solidarity of our Republic, must open the doors to our national community.”

A petition has been launched online.

Rights group SOS Racisme said: “Mamoudou Gassama serves as a useful reminder to us that people without papers are human beings with…great bravery that many have shown in their perilous journey to Europe – bravery that they often continue to display here.”

The drama took place on Saturday evening on a street in the north of the French capital. Mr Gassama told journalists he had been in the vicinity when he saw a crowd gathered in front of the building.

“I saw lots of people shouting and cars beeping. I saw that the child was going to fall from the balcony. I did it because it was a child,”BFM TV quoted him as saying.

“I climbed… Thank God I saved him.”

He added: “When I got the child, he was crying. I asked him where his mother was. He replied that she was at a party.”

Once safely inside, he said his legs felt like jelly and he collapsed on the sofa.

The Parisian fire service said crews had arrived to find the child had already been rescued.

“Luckily, there was someone who was physically fit and who had the courage to go and get the child,” a spokesman told AFP news agency.

Local authorities quoted by French media said the child’s parents were not at home at the time.